One of my sisters, whose name
begins with the letter G, was (still is?) a holy terror. I have many strong and abiding memories of
her daredevil antics.
I even felt one of them once. I
looked up to see my nana placing her hand on my mother’s arm and saying,
“Quietly, Ann. Don’t shout. You’ll frighten the child and she will fall.”
I could feel cold, hard terror
vibrating from my mother and I knew straight away G was Up To No Good.
We were in the hallway of our
house and the back door was open. Across
the yard were two old sheds and there was my sister walking along the edge of
the roof on the nearest one with not a care in the world. I’m not sure but she could have been
whistling.
She was perhaps three years
old. Definitely not more than four.
Another time she was running away
from my mother. This happened frequently
in our house. G was a bit of a sprinter.
That was handy because there was always
someone after her for something or other.
So there she was, zipping along, fleeing
from whatever punishment my beleaguered mother was trying to mete out and she
darted towards the gap at the edge of the pillar in our front garden.
Back then we used to play tennis
on the road at the front of our house.
We would ride our bicycles up and down all day, and if the weather was
bad enough, use a piece of old lino to drag each other up and down it in the
winter. It was a busy road for its time.
G got out through the gap and we
could all hear a car coming in the opposite direction. A nice straight stretch of road where you
could put your foot down if you really wanted to.
To this day I believe the driver
of that car heard my mother screaming for my sister to stop.
I don’t know how she was spared
otherwise.
One of my own boys took off
once. I was heavily pregnant, shoving an
equally pregnant shopping trolley and he just shot off towards the car. Which was across the way in the parking lot.
I remember abandoning the
trolley, clutching my huge belly and trying to take off after him.
When you are heavily pregnant,
the baby and everything else inside your uterus sits on top of your
bladder. Pressing on it. Even when your bladder is empty you still
feel a strong urge to wee.
All. The. Time.
Try that on for size when you
actually do need to make your wee’s but
it is also of utmost importance that you run after your escapee artist of a
child.
You may not think it, but it’s bloody
difficult to run when your legs are crossed and you’re hauling your pregnant
belly along for the ride.
Instead of screaming at them to
stop, because let’s face it, kids translate that as, “Run! Run as fast as you can!” try this instead.
Take a deep
breath and shout “chocolate!”
Or whatever it is your child
likes. Just shout the word.
Try it. It works.
Stops them in their tracks. Every time.
Thank you.
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